| Outcome | Probability | Yes Bid | Yes Ask | 24h Change | Volume | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Aleksandar Vukic | 70% | 56¢ | 84¢ | — | $104 | Trade → |
| Billy Harris | 0% | 33¢ | 90¢ | — | $0 | Trade → |
This market asks which competitor will win the head-to-head match labeled Vukic vs Harris; it matters because markets aggregate real-time expectations about the outcome and react quickly to match-specific news.
Vukic vs Harris is a single-match sporting contest where historical results, recent form, and contextual factors like surface and travel often determine the likely winner. Market prices reflect traders incorporating public information such as prior meetings, injury reports, and tournament context into a single, tradable view.
Treat market prices as the current consensus view of traders given available information; prices can move rapidly on late-breaking items like withdrawals, injury updates, or weather, so they are snapshots rather than guarantees.
The closing time is listed on the market page and is currently TBD; many match markets close at official match start or on an announced cutoff, so monitor the market header and exchange notifications for the confirmed close time.
There are two outcomes corresponding to each player winning the match: one outcome for Vukic winning and one for Harris winning. The market will settle to the officially reported match result per the exchange's rules.
Past meetings provide useful matchup context but can be a small sample; give more weight to recent encounters on the same surface and to how each player’s current form and fitness compare to those prior matches.
Surface alters which skills are rewarded (for example, faster courts typically help big servers), and tournament stage can change player behavior due to fatigue or stakes; use surface and stage information to adjust expectations for how the matchup will play out.
Official withdrawals, walkovers, retirements, and cancellations are handled according to the exchange’s settlement rules—often the non-withdrawing player is paid out—but details vary, so follow official tournament announcements and the market’s rulebook for specific settlement procedures.